Golfing News & Blog Articles
"How the PGA Tour resumed its season, navigated a pandemic and played its way to the Tour Championship"
There’s a lot of sound recap info from Brian Wacker at GolfDigest.com explaining how the PGA Tour has made it to the 2020 Tour Championship in a pandemic. With a large, often unwieldy band of egomaniacs to coral, it’s hard to imagine a better outcome for pro golf’s return after June’s inevitable rocky restart.
Yet in reading the piece, it’s also quite easy to imagine how the PGA Tour needs to remain vigilant both with safety practices, scheduling and welcoming back fans. The early wake up call is a good reminder of how things evolved:
Having a plan helped. And while it wasn’t without its holes, continued adjustments made a difference. One such change included an update during the Travelers that a player would not be eligible for the tour’s $100,000 stipend if he tested positive after not following the outlined safety protocols. Monahan emphasized that the onus was on everyone involved and said, “We need you to do your part.”
It was a wake-up call, indeed. And, for the most part, the players, caddies and all involved got the message.
As Wacker notes, the lack of a positive test in some time might also be a result of players taking the at-home tests before boarding a plane.
While some unidentified players, according to multiple sources, have tested positive at home in recent weeks and as a result did no play again until returning a negative result, no one has tested positive on site at a tournament in nearly a month. The tour hasn’t canceled any more tournaments, and earlier this week, Monahan unveiled a robust 50-tournament schedule for its 2020-’21 season that will begin next week in California.
Could this explain the epidemic of back injury WD’s in recent weeks? We’ll never know but ultimately, if players isolated and did not infect others on planes, airports, hotels or on the PGA Tour, then the system worked. Perfect, it is not. But six months into the pandemic, imperfect is more than acceptable compared to the alternative.